SOMETHING to HIDE? RIGHTS Indonesia’S Restrictions on Media Freedom WATCH and Rights Monitoring in Papua
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HUMAN SOMETHING TO HIDE? RIGHTS Indonesia’s Restrictions on Media Freedom WATCH and Rights Monitoring in Papua Something to Hide? Indonesia’s Restrictions on Media Freedom and Rights Monitoring in Papua Copyright © 2015 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-6231-32948 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch defends the rights of people worldwide. We scrupulously investigate abuses, expose the facts widely, and pressure those with power to respect rights and secure justice. Human Rights Watch is an independent, international organization that works as part of a vibrant movement to uphold human dignity and advance the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Sydney, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org SOMETHING TO HIDE? 2 NOVEMBER 2015 978-1-6231-32948 Something to Hide? Indonesia’s Restrictions on Media Freedom and Rights Monitoring in Papua Glossary ........................................................................................................................... i Map ................................................................................................................................. ii Summary ......................................................................................................................... 1 Key Recommendations ..................................................................................................... 6 Methodology ................................................................................................................... 7 I. Political Strife in Papua and Fears of Foreign Influence .................................................. 8 The Origins of Restrictions on Foreign Journalists .................................................................... 12 II. Vetting of Foreign Journalists by 12 Different Ministries ............................................. 14 The Clearing House ................................................................................................................. 14 President Jokowi’s Commitment to Lifting the Restrictions ...................................................... 21 III. Surveillance, Harassment, and Intimidation of Foreign Correspondents in Papua ...... 28 Arrests and Deportations of Journalists ................................................................................... 31 IV. Abuses against Indonesian Journalists in Papua ........................................................ 34 Harassment and Intimidation by Officials, Security Forces, and Pro-Independence Activists .... 34 Violence against Journalists .................................................................................................... 39 Self-Censorship ...................................................................................................................... 42 Fake Journalists and Informants .............................................................................................. 43 V. Restrictions on International Civil Society Organizations and UN Monitors ................. 47 The ICRC, Cordaid, and Peace Brigades International .............................................................. 50 UN Officials and Foreign Academics ........................................................................................ 54 VI. Applicable National and International Law ................................................................ 58 VII. Recommendations ................................................................................................... 62 To the President of Indonesia ................................................................................................ 62 To the Ministry of Foreign Affairs ............................................................................................ 62 To the National Police and Other Security Forces .................................................................... 62 To the Attorney General’s Office .............................................................................................. 63 To the National Committee for West Papua (KNPB) .................................................................. 63 To the United States, the European Union and Member States, and other Donor Countries ...... 63 Appendix I: Letter from HRW to Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo ............................... 64 Appendix II: Letter from HRW to Indonesia’s National Police Director ............................ 68 Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................... 71 Glossary BAIS Badan Intelijen Strategis, or the military intelligence. BIN Badan Intelijen Negara, or the State Intelligence Agency ICRC International Committee of the Red Cross ICCPR International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Inpres Instruksi Presiden, or Presidential Instruction, a form of executive authority in Indonesia KNPB Komite Nasional Papua Barat, or the National Committee for West Papua Kopassus Komando Pasukan Khusus, Indonesia’s Special Forces Unit MFA Ministry of Foreign Affairs MHA Ministry of Home Affairs OPM Organisasi Papua Merdeka, or the Free Papua Movement, an armed pro- independence opposition group established in 1965. PBI Peace Brigades International PDIP Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle Surat Jalan An official government-issued travel document often required for access to Papua. SKP Papuan Catholic Human Rights Office of Justice and Peace UNHCR United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees I HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | NOVEMBER 2015 Map SOMETHING TO HIDE? II Summary They kept on having a friendly tone: ‘Yes, we’re looking for the right date, we’re more than happy to receive you, let’s look for a date.’ But they never said anything [regarding a solid date]. It was plausible deniability. I think what it shows is that there must be a lot to hide in Papua. —Former UN Special Rapporteur Frank La Rue, describing the response of Indonesian officials to his 2012-13 request to visit Papua Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo—popularly known as Jokowi—announced on May 10, 2015, that the government would immediately lift longstanding access restrictions on accredited foreign journalists seeking to report from the provinces of Papua and West Papua (referred to as “Papua” in the rest of this report). The president’s announcement sparked optimism that Indonesia would soon end its decades-long restrictions not only on foreign reporters, but also on UN officials, representatives of international aid groups, and others seeking to work in Papua. The access restrictions—fueled by government suspicion about the motivations of foreign nationals in a region troubled by widespread public dissatisfaction with Jakarta and a small but persistent pro-independence insurgency—have limited in-depth reporting on Papua, have done little to prevent negative portrayals of Jakarta’s role there, and continue to be a lightning rod for Indonesia’s critics. To date, however, President Jokowi’s welcome announcement has produced almost as much confusion as clarity. This report—based on interviews with 107 journalists, editors, publishers, NGO representatives, and academics—traces the history of access restrictions in Papua and developments since the president’s announcement. It shows that access restrictions are deeply ingrained, that parts of the government are strongly resisting change, and that a genuine opening of the provinces will require more sustained and rigorous follow-through by the Jokowi administration. For at least 25 years and likely much longer, foreign correspondents wanting to report from Papua have had to apply for access through an interagency “clearing house,” supervised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and involving 18 working units from 12 different 1 HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | NOVEMBER 2015 ministries, including the National Police and the State Intelligence Agency. The clearing house has served as a strict gatekeeper, often denying applications outright or simply failing to approve them, placing journalists in a bureaucratic limbo. In some periods, the process operated as a de facto ban on foreign media in Papua. While the government appears to have eased its restrictions over the past decade, the process for foreign correspondents to acquire official permission to travel to Papua has remained opaque and unpredictable at best. Bobby Anderson, a social development specialist and researcher who worked in Papua from 2010 to 2015, described the government’s clearing house screening of foreign media access to Papua as “illogical and counterproductive.”1 He told us: The clearing house system of consensus voting means any one person has veto power, which generally means that the opinion of the most paranoid person in the meeting carries the day. These restrictions fuel all manner of speculation about Papua: the notion that the Indonesian government has “something to hide” finds purchase. But the Indonesian government finds itself in the illogical position where they hear of inflammatory reporting and this actually makes them impose restrictions, and then those restrictions prevent good journalists from writing of the complexities of the place.2 President